Moving the crowd
It is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is x í ngsh ī D ò ngzh ò ng, which means to command the army. It comes from the annals of the Three Kingdoms, the book of Wei, the record of Emperor Ming.
The origin of Idioms
Pei Songzhi's annotation of "Gui Chou, burying Gaoping mausoleum" in the chronicles of the Three Kingdoms · Wei Shu · Ming Di Ji quoted Wang Shen's Wei Shu of Jin Dynasty: "after he ascended the throne, he praised the Minister of rites. He could not trade the truth with the falsehood. He must avoid the end of ostentation and destruction. He should mobilize the public, discuss major issues, counsel ministers and generals, and obey the emperor's plan."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: stir up the army, stir up the army, stir up the army [antonym]: single handedly, make small trouble
Idiom usage
It refers to large-scale action.
Chinese PinYin : xíng shī dòng zhòng
Moving the crowd
ideal setting for a couple in love. fēng qián yuè xià
authorized to open letters and act during another's absence. dài chāi dài xíng